Horizontal panning for PIP display in wide screen television

ABSTRACT

A video display for a television apparatus has a wide format display ratio and is synchronized with a first video signal representative of first picture. A PIP processor is responsive to a second video signal representative of a second picture to define an auxiliary picture smaller in size than the video display. A FIFO line memory stores successive lines of video information representative of the auxiliary picture, which are combined with certain successive lines of video information representative of the first picture. A counter initialized at a time corresponding to the start of each horizontal line of the first video signal generates a variable time delay. A FIFO control circuit successively initiates a transfer of the lines of video information representative of the auxiliary picture from the line memory for combination with the video information representative of the main picture after the variable time delay. The variable time delay determines one of a plurality of horizontal panning positions of the auxiliary picture across all of the video display. A manually operable remote control can be used for adjusting the variable time delay.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The invention relates to the field of displaying auxiliary pictures, for example picture-in-picture (PIP) displays, in wide screen televisions, and in particular, to wide screen televisions which use auxiliary video signal processing circuits designed for conventional televisions for mapping or determining the positions of the auxiliary pictures.

2. Description of the Art

Televisions having a format display ratio of 4:3, often referred to as 4×3, are limited in the ways that single and multiple video signal sources can be displayed. Television signal transmissions of commercial broadcasters, except for experimental material, are is broadcast with a 4×3 format display ratio. Many viewers find the 4×3 display format less pleasing than the wider format display ratio associated with the movies. Televisions with a wide format display ratio provide not only a more pleasing display, but are capable of displaying wide display format signal sources in a corresponding wide display format. Movies "look" like movies, not cropped or distorted versions thereof. The video source need not be cropped, either when converted from film to video, for example with a telecine device, or by processors in the television.

Televisions with a wide display format ratio are also suited to a wide variety of displays for both conventional and wide display format signals, as well as combinations thereof in multiple picture displays. However, the use of a wide display ratio screen entails numerous problems. Changing the display format ratios of multiple signal sources, developing consistent timing signals from asynchronous but simultaneously displayed sources, switching between multiple sources to generate multiple picture displays, and providing high resolution pictures from compressed data signals are general categories of such problems. Such problems are solved in a wide screen television according to this invention. A wide screen television according to various inventive arrangements is capable of providing high resolution, single and multiple picture displays, from single and multiple sources having similar or different format ratios, and with selectable display format ratios.

Televisions with a wide display format ratio can be implemented in television systems displaying video signals both at basic or standard horizontal scanning rates and multiples thereof, as well as by both interlaced and noninterlaced scanning. Standard NTSC video signals, for example, are displayed by interlacing the successive fields of each video frame, each field being generated by a raster scanning operation at a basic or standard horizontal scanning rate of approximately 15,734 Hz. The basic scanning rate for video signals is variously referred to as f_(H), 1 f_(H), and 1 H. The actual frequency of a 1 f_(H) signal will vary according to different video standards. In accordance with efforts to improve the picture quality of television apparatus, systems have been developed for displaying video signals progressively, in a noninterlaced fashion. Progressive scanning requires that each displayed frame must be scanned in the same time period allotted for scanning one of the two fields of the interlaced format. Flicker free AA-BB displays require that each field be scanned twice, consecutively. In each case, the horizontal scanning frequency must be twice that of the standard horizontal frequency. The scanning rate for such progressively scanned or flicker free displays is variously referred to as 2 f_(H) and 2 H. A 2 f_(H) scanning frequency according to standards in the United States, for example, is approximately 31,468 Hz.

The overlay function in a simultaneous picture display provides timing signals for the display to switch from the large picture to the small picture, and back to the large picture, at the correct time. Both horizontal and vertical timing of the small picture overlay are critical to displaying the small picture. A PIP processor designed for use with 4×3 displays is the CPIP chip developed by Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc. The CPIP chip is described more fully in a publication entitled The CTC 140 Picture in Picture (CPIP) Technical Training Manual, available from Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc., Indianapolis, Ind. The CPIP chip can be used in such a fashion that the auxiliary video information is stored in a 6 bit Y, U, V, 8:1:1 video RAM field memory. The video RAM holds two fields of video data in a plurality of memory locations. Each memory location holds eight bits of data. In each 8-bit location there is one 6-bit Y (luminance) sample and 2 other bits. These two other bits hold either fast switch data or part of a U or V sample. The fast switch values can be decoded to indicate which type of field was written into video RAM, as either an upper (odd) field, a lower (even) field or no picture (invalid data). The fields occupy spatial positions within the video RAM having boundaries defined by horizontal and vertical addresses. The boundary is defined at those addresses by a change in the fast switch data from no picture to valid field, and vice versa. These transitions in fast switch data define the perimeter of the picture overlay. It will be appreciated that the image aspect ratio of objects in the overlay can be controlled independently of the format display ratio of the overlay itself, for example, 4×3 or 16×9. The position of the overlay on the screen will be determined by the starting address of the read pointer of the video RAM at the start of the scanning for each field of the main signal. Since there are two fields of data stored in the video RAM, and the entire video RAM is read during the display period, both fields are read during the display scan. The field which is read out of the memory to be displayed is determined by decoding the fast switch data and setting the start position of the read pointer of the video RAM.

A problem arises in those instances when the PIP video processing circuit for the auxiliary video signal embodies an architecture originally intended for use with televisions having conventional format display ratios, that is 4×3, such as the CPIP chip described above. Many such processing circuits can be powerful tools for developing multiple picture displays, and their use can simplify and/or accelerate development of wide screen televisions. Indeed, such a 4×3 video processing circuit can be programmed to place a PIP insert at many locations, depending on the design. Even in those PIP circuits providing the widest latitude in PIP placement, the placement is horizontally limited within the border of a 4×3 display, having a vertical dimension corresponding to the vertical height of the wide screen display. In other words, it is simply not possible to define a position which exceeds the horizontal borders of the 4×3 video display map which is defined by the PIP circuit. This display map is a function of the video RAM and the write/read address control which are associated with the PIP circuit. There are two alternatives, but each has a significant disadvantage. One such alternative is to allow the picture to stretch to fill the wide screen display, incurring significant image aspect ratio distortion in both the main picture and in the PIP insert. In another alternative, this horizontal stretching can be avoided by undertaking an asymmetric decimation of the auxiliary video signal to generate the small picture. However, this procedure is extremely difficult because all reduction factors other than three prove to be noninteger processes, and most PIP processors are not capable of any noninteger decimation. Accordingly, PIP inserts would be limited in size, as a practical matter, to a picture 1/3 the size of the original picture. More flexibility in PIP insert size is required in order to implement the many display formats which are possible with a wide screen television.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A wide screen television apparatus in accordance with an inventive arrangement comprises a video display having a wide format display ratio and synchronized with a first video signal representative of first picture. A PIP processor is responsive to a second video signal representative of a second picture to define an auxiliary picture smaller in size than the video display. A FIFO line memory stores successive lines of video information representative of the auxiliary picture, which are combined with certain successive lines of video information representative of the first picture. A counter initialized at a time corresponding to the start of each horizontal line of the first video signal generates a variable time delay. A FIFO control circuit successively initiates a transfer of the lines of video information representative of the auxiliary picture from the line memory for combination with the video information representative of the main picture after the variable time delay. The variable time delay determines one of a plurality of horizontal panning positions of the auxiliary picture across all of the video display. A manually operable controller, for example a remote control, can be used for adjusting the variable time delay, and therefore the horizontal panning position.

The video information representative of the auxiliary picture is vertically synchronized with the video display by operation of the PIP processor, or by combined operation of the PIP processor and the FIFO line memory. Each line of the auxiliary picture as shown on the video display has a certain number of video samples and each of the lines of video information written into the FIFO line memory has a number of video samples approximately equal to that certain number.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1(a)-1(i) are useful for explaining different display formats of a wide screen television.

FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a wide screen television in accordance with aspects of this invention and adapted for operation at 2 f_(H) horizontal scanning.

FIGS. 3 is a block diagram of the wide screen processor shown in FIG. 2.

FIG. 4 is a block diagram showing further details of the wide screen processor shown in FIG. 3.

FIG. 5 is a block diagram of the picture-in-picture processor shown in FIG. 4.

FIG. 6 is a block diagram of the gate array shown in FIG. 4 and illustrating the main, auxiliary and output signal paths.

FIGS. 7 and 8 are timing diagrams useful for explaining the generation of the display format shown in FIG. 1(d), using fully cropped signals.

FIG. 9 is a block diagram showing the main signal path of FIG. 6 in more detail.

FIG. 10 is a block diagram showing the auxiliary signal path and output signal path of FIG. 6 in more detail.

FIG. 11 is a block diagram of the timing and control section of the picture-in-picture processor of FIG. 5.

FIG. 12 is a block diagram of a circuit for generating the internal 2 f_(H) signal in the 1 f_(H) to 2 f_(H) conversion.

FIG. 13 is a combination block and circuit diagram for the deflection circuit shown in FIG. 2.

FIG. 14 is a block diagram of the RGB interface shown in FIG. 2.

FIG. 15 is a diagram useful for explaining memory mapping in the video RAM associated with the picture-in-picture processor.

FIG. 16 is a block diagram of a circuit for controlling output switching between main and auxiliary video signals.

FIG. 17 is a diagram useful for explaining video RAM operation during horizontal PIP panning.

FIG. 18 is a diagram useful for explaining auxiliary FIFO operation during horizontal PIP panning.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

The various parts of FIG. 1 illustrate some, but not all of the various combinations of single and multiple picture display formats which can be implemented according to different inventive arrangements. Those selected for illustration are intended to facilitate the description of particular circuits comprising wide screen televisions according to the inventive arrangements. The inventive arrangements are in some cases directed to the display formats themselves, apart from specific underlying circuitry. For purposes of convenience in illustration and discussion herein, a conventional display format ratio of width to height for a video source or signal is generally deemed to be 4×3, whereas a wide screen display format ratio of width to height for a video source or signal is generally deemed to be 16×9. The inventive arrangements are not limited by these definitions.

FIG. 1(a) illustrates a television, direct view or projection, having a conventional format display ratio of 4×3. When a 16×9 format display ratio picture is transmitted, as a 4×3 format display ratio signal, black bars appear at the top and at the bottom. This is commonly referred to as letterbox format. In this instance, the viewed picture is rather small with respect to the entire available display area. Alternatively, the 16×9 format display ratio source is converted prior to transmission, so that it will fill the vertical extent of a viewing surface of 4×3 format display. However, much information will be cropped from the left and/or right sides. As a further alternative, the letterbox picture can be expanded vertically but not horizontally, whereby the resulting picture will evidence distortion by vertical elongation. None of the three alternatives is particularly appealing.

FIG. 1(b) shows a 16×9 screen. A 16×9 format display ratio video source would be fully displayed, without cropping and without distortion. A 16×9 format display ratio letterbox picture, which is itself in a 4×3 format display ratio signal, can be progressively scanned by line doubling or line addition, so as to provide a larger display with sufficient vertical resolution. A wide screen television in accordance with this invention can display such a 16×9 format display ratio signal whether the main source, the auxiliary source or an external RGB source.

FIG. 1(c) illustrates a 16×9 format display ratio main signal in which a 4×3 format display ratio inset picture is displayed. If both the main and auxiliary video signals are 16×9 format display ratio sources, the inset picture can also have a 16×9 format display ratio. The inset picture can be displayed in many different positions.

FIG. 1(d) illustrates a display format, wherein the main and auxiliary video signals are displayed with the same size picture. Each display area has an format display ratio of 8×9, which is of course different from both 16×9 and 4×3. In order to show a 4×3 format display ratio source in such a display area, without horizontal or vertical distortion, the signal must be cropped on the left and/or right sides. More of the picture can be shown, with less cropping, if some aspect ratio distortion by horizontal squeezing of the picture is tolerated. Horizontal squeezing results in vertical elongation of objects in the picture. The wide screen television according to this invention can provide any mix of cropping and aspect ratio distortion from maximum cropping with no aspect ratio distortion to no cropping with maximum aspect ratio distortion.

Data sampling limitations in the auxiliary video signal processing path complicate the generation of a high resolution picture which is as large in size as the display from the main video signal. Various methods can be developed for overcoming these complications.

FIG. 1(e) is a display format wherein a 4×3 format display ratio picture is displayed in the center of a 16×9 format display ratio screen. Dark bars are evident on the right and left sides.

FIG. 1(f) illustrates a display format wherein one large 4×3 format display ratio picture and three smaller 4×3 format display ratio pictures are displayed simultaneously. A smaller picture outside the perimeter of the large picture is sometimes referred to as a POP, that is a picture-outside-picture, rather than a PIP, a picture-in-picture. The terms PIP or picture-in-picture are used herein for both display formats. In those circumstances where the wide screen television is provided with two tuners, either both internal or one internal and one external, for example in a video cassette recorder, two of the displayed pictures can display movement in real time in accordance with the source. The remaining pictures can be displayed in freeze frame format. It will be appreciated that the addition of further tuners and additional auxiliary signal processing paths can provide for more than two moving pictures. It will also be appreciated that the large picture on the one hand, and the three small pictures on the other hand, can be switched in position, as shown in FIG. 1(g).

FIG. 1(h) illustrates an alternative wherein the 4×3 format display ratio picture is centered, and six smaller 4×3 format display ratio pictures are displayed in vertical columns on either side. As in the previously described format, a wide screen television provided with two tuners can provide two moving pictures. The remaining eleven pictures will be in freeze frame format.

FIG. 1(i) shows a display format having a grid of twelve 4×3 format display ratio pictures. Such a display format is particularly appropriate for a channel selection guide, wherein each picture is at least a freeze frame from a different channel. As before, the number of moving pictures will depend upon the number of available tuners and signal processing paths.

The various formats shown in FIG. 1 are illustrative, and not limiting, and can be implemented by wide screen televisions shown in the remaining drawings and described in detail below.

An overall block diagram for a wide screen television in accordance with inventive arrangements, and adapted to operate with 2 f_(H) horizontal scanning, is shown in FIG. 2 and generally designated 10. The television 10 generally comprises a video signals input section 20, a chassis or TV microprocessor 216, a wide screen processor 30, a 1 f_(H) to 2 f_(H) converter 40, a deflection circuit 50, an RGB interface 60, a YUV to RGB converter 240, which can be an industry type TA7730, kine drivers 242, direct view or projection tubes 244 and a power supply 70. The grouping of various circuits into different functional blocks is made for purposes of convenience in description, and is not intended as limiting the physical position of such circuits relative to one another.

The video signals input section 20 is adapted for receiving a plurality of composite video signals from different video sources. The video signals may be selectively switched for display as main and auxiliary video signals. An RF switch 204 has two antenna inputs ANT1 and ANT2. These represent inputs for both off-air antenna reception and cable reception. The RF switch 204 controls which antenna input is supplied to a first tuner 206 and to a second tuner 208. The output of first tuner 206 is an input to a one-chip 202, which performs a number of functions related to tuning, horizontal and vertical deflection and video controls. The particular one-chip shown is industry type TA7777. The baseband video signal VIDEO OUT developed in the one-chip and resulting from the signal from first tuner 206 is an input to both video switch 200 and the TV1 input of wide screen processor 30. Other baseband video inputs to video switch 200 are designated AUX1 and AUX2. These might be used for video cameras, laser disc players, video tape players, video games and the like. The output of the video switch 200, which is controlled by the chassis or TV microprocessor 216 is designated SWITCHED VIDEO. The SWITCHED VIDEO is another input to wide screen processor 30.

With further reference to FIG. 3, a switch SW1 wide screen processor selects between the TV1 and SWITCHED VIDEO signals as a SEL COMP OUT video signal which is an input to a Y/C decoder 210. The Y/C decoder 210 may be implemented as an adaptive line comb filter. Two further video sources S1 and S2 are also inputs to the Y/C decoder 210. Each of S1 and S2 represent different S-VHS sources, and each consists of separate luminance and chrominance signals. A switch, which may be incorporated as part of the Y/C decoder, as in some adaptive line comb filters, or which may be implemented as a separate switch, is responsive to the TV microprocessor 216 for selecting one pair of luminance and chrominance signals as outputs designated Y₋₋ M and C₋₋ IN respectively. The selected pair of luminance and chrominance signals is thereafter considered the main signal and is processed along a main signal path. Signal designations including ₋₋ M or ₋₋ MN refer to the main signal path. The chrominance signal C₋₋ IN is redirected by the wide screen processor back to the one-chip, for developing color difference signals U₋₋ M and V₋₋ M. In this regard, U is an equivalent designation for (R-Y) and V is an equivalent designation for (B-Y). The Y₋₋ M, U₋₋ M, and V₋₋ M signals are converted to digital form in the wide screen processor for further signal processing.

The second tuner 208, functionally defined as part of the wide screen processor 30, develops a baseband video signal TV2. A switch SW2 selects between the TV2 and SWITCHED VIDEO signals as an input to a Y/C decoder 210. The Y/C decoder 210 may be implemented as an adaptive line comb filter. Switches SW3 and SW4 select between the luminance and chrominance outputs of Y/C decoder 220 and the luminance and chrominance signals of an external video source, designated Y₋₋ EXT and C₋₋ EXT respectively. The Y₋₋ EXT and C₋₋ EXT signals correspond to the S-VHS input S1. The Y/C decoder 220 and switches SW3 and SW4 may be combined, as in some adaptive line comb filters. The output of switches SW3 and SW4 is thereafter considered the auxiliary signal and is processed along an auxiliary signal path. The selected luminance output is designated Y₋₋ A. Signal designations including ₋₋ A, ₋₋ AX and ₋₋ AUX refer to the auxiliary signal path. The selected chrominance is converted to color difference signals U₋₋ A and V₋₋ A. The Y₋₋ A, U₋₋ A and V₋₋ A signals are converted to digital form for further signal processing. The arrangement of video signal source switching in the main and auxiliary signal paths maximizes flexibility in managing the source selection for the different parts of the different picture display formats.

A composite synchronizing signal COMP SYNC, corresponding to Y₋₋ M is provided by the wide screen processor to a sync separator 212. The horizontal and vertical synchronizing components H and V respectively are inputs to a vertical countdown circuit 214. The vertical countdown circuit develops a VERTICAL RESET signal which is directed into the wide screen processor 30. The wide screen processor generates an internal vertical reset output signal INT VERT RST OUT directed to the RGB interface 60. A switch in the RGB interface 60 selects between the internal vertical reset output signal and the vertical synchronizing component of the external RGB source. The output of this switch is a selected vertical synchronizing component SEL₋₋ VERT₋₋ SYNC directed to the deflection circuit 50. Horizontal and vertical synchronizing signals of the auxiliary video signal are developed by sync separator 212 in the wide screen processor.

The 1 f_(H) to 2 f_(H) converter 40 is responsible for converting interlaced video signals to progressively scanned noninterlaced signals, for example one wherein each horizontal line is displayed twice, or an additional set of horizontal lines is generated by interpolating adjacent horizontal lines of the same field. In some instances, the use of a previous line or the use of an interpolated line will depend upon the level of movement which is detected between adjacent fields or frames. The converter circuit 40 operates in conjunction with a video RAM 420. The video RAM may be used to store one or more fields of a frame, to enable the progressive display. The converted video data as Y₋₋ 2 f_(H), U₋₋ 2 f_(H) and V₋₋ 2 f_(H) signals is supplied to the RGB interface 60.

The RGB interface 60, shown in more detail in FIG. 14, enables selection of the converted video data or external RGB video data for display by the video signals input section. The external RGB signal is deemed to be a wide format display ratio signal adapted for 2 f_(H) scanning. The vertical synchronizing component of the main signal is supplied to the RGB interface by the wide screen processor as INT VERT RST OUT, enabling a selected vertical sync (f_(Vm) or f_(Vext)) to be available to the deflection circuit 50. Operation of the wide screen television enables user selection of an external RGB signal, by generating an internal/external control signal INT/EXT. However, the selection of an external RGB signal input, in the absence of such a signal, can result in vertical collapse of the raster, and damage to the cathode ray tube or projection tubes. Accordingly, the RGB interface circuit detects an external synchronizing signal, in order to override the selection of a non-existent external RGB input. The WSP microprocessor 340 also supplies color and tint controls for the external RGB signal.

The wide screen processor 30 comprises a picture in picture processor 301 for special signal processing of the auxiliary video signal. The term picture-in-picture is sometimes abbreviated as PIP or pix-in-pix. A gate array 300 combines the main and auxiliary video signal data in a wide variety of display formats, as shown by the examples of FIGS. 1(b) through 1(i). The picture-in-picture processor 301 and gate array 300 are under the control of a wide screen microprocessor (WSP μP) 340. Microprocessor 340 is responsive to the TV microprocessor 216 over a serial bus. The serial bus includes four signal lines, for data, clock signals, enable signals and reset signals. The wide screen processor 30 also generates a composite vertical blanking/reset signal, as a three level sandcastle signal. Alternatively, the vertical blanking and reset signals can be generated as separate signals. A composite blanking signal is supplied by the video signal input section to the RGB interface.

The deflection circuit 50, shown in more detail in FIG. 13, receives a vertical reset signal from the wide screen processor, a selected 2 f_(H) horizontal synchronizing signal from the RGB interface 60 and additional control signals from the wide screen processor. These additional control signals relate to horizontal phasing, vertical size adjustment and east-west pin adjustment. The deflection circuit 50 supplies 2 f_(H) flyback pulses to the wide screen processor 30, the 1 f_(H) to 2 f_(H) converter 40 and the YUV to RGB converter 240.

Operating voltages for the entire wide screen television are generated by a power supply 70 which can be energized by an AC mains supply.

The wide screen processor 30 is shown in more detail in FIG. 3. The principal components of the wide screen processor are a gate array 300, a picture-in-picture circuit 301, analog to digital and digital to analog converters, the second tuner 208, a wide screen processor microprocessor 340 and a wide screen output encoder 227. Further details of the wide screen processor, which are in common with both the 1 f_(H) and the 2 f_(H) chassis, for example the PIP circuit, are shown in FIG. 4. A picture-in-picture processor 320, which forms a significant part of the PIP circuit 301, is shown in more detail in FIG. 5. The gate array 300 is shown in more detail in FIG. 6. A number of the components shown in FIG. 3, forming parts of the main and auxiliary signal paths, have already been described in detail.

The second tuner 208 has associated therewith an IF stage 224 and an audio stage 226. The second tuner 208 also operates in conjunction with the WSP μP 340. The WSP μP 340 comprises an input output I/O section 340A and an analog output section 340B. The I/O section 340A provides tint and color control signals, the INT/EXT signal for selecting the external RGB video source and control signals for the switches SW1 through SW6. The I/O section also monitors the EXT SYNC DET signal from the RGB interface to protect the deflection circuit and cathode ray tube(s). The analog output section 340B provides control signals for vertical size, east-west adjust and horizontal phase, through respective interface circuits 254, 256 and 258.

The gate array 300 is responsible for combining video information from the main and auxiliary signal paths to implement a composite wide screen display, for example one of those shown in the different parts of FIG. 1. Clock information for the gate array is provided by phase locked loop 374, which operates in conjunction with low pass filter 376. The main video signal is supplied to the wide screen processor in analog form, and Y U V format, as signals designated Y₋₋ M, U₋₋ M and V₋₋ M. These main signals are converted from analog to digital form by analog to digital converters 342 and 346, shown in more detail in FIG. 4.

The color component signals are referred to by the generic designations U and V, which may be assigned to either R-Y or B-Y signals, or I and Q signals. The sampled luminance bandwidth is limited to 8 MHz because the system clock rate is 1024 f_(H), which is approximately 16 MHz. A single analog to digital converter and an analog switch can be used to sample the color component data because the U and V signals are limited to 500 KHz, or 1.5 MHz for wide I. The select line UV₋₋ MUX for the analog switch, or multiplexer 344, is an 8 MHz signal derived by dividing the system clock by 2. A one clock wide start of line SOL pulse synchronously resets this signal to zero at the beginning of each horizontal video line. The UV₋₋ MUX line than toggles in state each clock cycle through the horizontal line. Since the line length is an even number of clock cycles, the state of the UV₋₋ MUX, once initialized, will consistently toggle 0, 1, 0, 1, . . . , without interruption. The Y and UV data streams out of the analog to digital converters 342 and 346 are shifted because the analog to digital converters each have 1 clock cycle of delay. In order to accommodate for this data shift, the clock gating information from the interpolator control 349 of main signal processing path 304 must be similarly delayed. Were the clock gating information not delayed, the UV data will not be correctly paired when deleted. This is important because each UV pair represents one vector. A U element from one vector cannot be paired with a V element from another vector without causing a color shift. Instead, a V sample from a previous pair will be deleted along with the current U sample. This method of UV multiplexing is referred to as 2:1:1, as there are two luminance samples for every pair of color component (U, V) samples. The Nyquist frequency for both U and V is effectively reduced to one half of the luminance Nyquist frequency. Accordingly, the Nyquist frequency of the output of the analog to digital converter for the luminance component is 8 MHz, whereas the Nyquist frequency of the output of the analog to digital converter for the color components is 4 MHz.

The PIP circuit and/or the gate array may also include means for enhancing the resolution of the auxiliary data notwithstanding the data compression. A number of data reduction and data restoration schemes have been developed, including for example paired pixel compression and dithering and dedithering. Moreover, different dithering sequences involving different numbers of bits and different paired pixel compressions involving different numbers of bits are contemplated. One of a number of particular data reduction and restoration schemes can be selected by the WSP μP 340 in order to maximize resolution of the displayed video for each particular kind of picture display format.

The gate array includes interpolators which operate in conjunction with line memories, which may be implemented as FIFO's 356 and 358. The interpolator and FIFO's are utilized to resample the main signal as desired. An additional interpolator can resample the auxiliary signal. Clock and synchronizing circuits in the gate array control the data manipulation of both the main and auxiliary signals, including the combination thereof into a single output video signal having Y₋₋ MX, U₋₋ MX and V₋₋ MX components. These output components are converted to analog form by digital to analog converters 360, 362 and 364. The analog form signals, designated Y, U and V, are supplied to the 1 f_(H) to 2 f_(H) converter 40 for conversion to noninterlaced scanning. The Y, U and V signals are also encoded to Y/C format by encoder 227 to define a wide format ratio output signal Y₋₋ OUT₋₋ EXT/C₋₋ OUT₋₋ EXT available at panel jacks. Switch SW5 selects a synchronizing signal for the encoder 227 from either the gate array, C₋₋ SYNC₋₋ MN, or from the PIP circuit, C₋₋ SYNC₋₋ AUX. Switch SW6 selects between Y₋₋ M and C₋₋ SYNC₋₋ AUX as synchronizing signal for the wide screen panel output.

Portions of the horizontal synchronizing circuit are shown in more detail in FIG. 12. Phase comparator 228 is part of a phase locked loop including low pass filter 230, voltage controlled oscillator 232, divider 234 and capacitor 236. The voltage controlled oscillator 232 operates at 32 f_(H), responsive to a ceramic resonator or the like 238. The output of the voltage controlled oscillator is divided by 32 to provide a proper frequency second input signal to phase comparator 228. The output of the divider 234 is a 1 f_(H) REF timing signal. The 32 f_(H) REF and 1 f_(H) REF timing signals are supplied to a divide by 16 counter 400. A 2 f_(H) output is supplied to a pulse width circuit 402. Presetting divider 400 by the 1 f_(H) REF signal assures that the divider operates synchronously with the phase locked loop of the video signals input section. Pulse width circuit 402 assures that a 2 f_(H) -REF signal will have an adequate pulse width to assure proper operation of the phase comparator 404, for example a type CA1391, which forms part of a second phase locked loop including low pass filter 406 and 2 f_(H) voltage controlled oscillator 408. Voltage controlled oscillator 408 generates an internal 2 f_(H) timing signal, which is used for driving the progressively scanned display. The other input signal to phase comparator 404 is the 2 f_(H) flyback pulses or a timing signal related thereto. The use of the second phase locked loop including phase comparator 404 is useful for assuring that each 2 f_(H) scanning period is symmetric within each 1 f_(H) period of the input signal. Otherwise, the display may exhibit a raster split, for example, wherein half of the video lines are shifted to the right and half of the video lines are shifted to the left.

The deflection circuit 50 is shown in more detail in FIG. 13. A circuit 500 is provided for adjusting the vertical size of the raster, in accordance with a desired amount of vertical overscan necessary for implementing different display formats. As illustrated diagrammatically, a constant current source 502 provides a constant quantity of current IRAMP which charges a vertical ramp capacitor 504. A transistor 506 is coupled in parallel with the vertical ramp capacitor, and periodically discharges the capacitor responsive to the vertical reset signal. In the absence of any adjustment, current IRAMP provides the maximum available vertical size for the raster. This might correspond to the extent of vertical overscan needed to fill the wide screen display by an expanded 4×3 format display ratio signal source, as shown in FIG. 1(a). To the extent that less vertical raster size is required, an adjustable current source 508 diverts a variable amount of current I_(ADJ) from I_(RAMP), so that vertical ramp capacitor 504 charges more slowly and to a smaller peak value. Variable current source 508 is responsive to a vertical size adjust signal, for example in analog form, generated by a vertical size control circuit. Vertical size adjustment 500 is independent of a manual vertical size adjustment 510, which may be implemented by a potentiometer or back panel adjustment knob. In either event, the vertical deflection coil(s) 512 receive(s) driving current of the proper magnitude. Horizontal deflection is provided by phase adjusting circuit 518, East-West pin correction circuit 514, a 2 f_(H) phase locked loop 520 and horizontal output circuit 516.

The RGB interface circuit 60 is shown in more detailed in FIG. 14. The signal which is to be ultimately displayed will be selected between the output of the 1 f_(H) to 2 f_(H) converter 40 and an external RGB input. For purposes of the wide screen television described herein, the external RGB input is presumed to be a wide format display ratio, progressively scanned source. The external RGB signals and a composite blanking signal from the video signals input section 20 are inputs to an RGB to Y U V converter 610. The external 2 f_(H) composite synchronizing signal for the external RGB signal is an input to external synchronizing signal separator 600. Selection of the vertical synchronizing signal is implemented by switch 608. Selection of the horizontal synchronizing signal is implemented by switch 604. Selection of the video signal is implemented by switch 606. Each of the switches 604, 606 and 608 is responsive to an internal/external control signal generated by the WSP μP 340. Selection of internal or external video sources is a user selection. However, if a user inadvertently selects an external RGB source, when no such source is connected or turned on, or if the external source drops out, the vertical raster will collapse, and serious damage to the cathode ray tube(s) can result. Accordingly, an external synchronizing detector 602 checks for the presence of an external synchronizing signal. In the absence of such a signal, a switch override control signal is transmitted to each of switches 604, 606 and 608, to prevent selection of the external RGB source if the signal therefrom is not present. The RGB to YUV converter 610 also receives tint and color control signals from the WSP μP 340.

A wide screen television in accordance with the inventive arrangements can be implemented with 1 f_(H) horizontal scanning instead of 2 f_(H) horizontal scanning, although such a circuit is not illustrated. A 1 f_(H) circuit would not require the 1 f_(H) to 2 f_(H) converter and the RGB interface. Accordingly, there would be no provision for displaying an external wide format display ratio RGB signal at a 2 f_(H) scanning rate. The wide screen processor and picture-in-picture processor for a 1 f_(H) circuit would be very similar. The gate array could be substantially identical, although not all of the inputs and outputs would be utilized. The various resolution enhancement schemes described herein can be generally applied without regard to whether the television operates with 1 f_(H) or 2 f_(H) scanning.

FIG. 4 is a block diagram showing further details of the wide screen processor 30 shown in FIG. 3 which would be the same for both a 1 f_(H) and 2 f_(H) chassis. The Y₋₋ A, U₋₋ A and V₋₋ A signals are an input to the picture in picture processor 320, which can include a resolution processing circuit 370. The wide screen television according to aspects of this invention can expand and compress video. The special effects embodied by the various composite display formats illustrated in part in FIG. 1 are generated by the picture-in-picture processor 320, which can receive resolution processed data signals Y₋₋ RP, U₋₋ RP and V₋₋ RP from resolution processing circuit 370. Resolution processing need not be utilized at all times, but during selected display formats. The picture-in-picture processor 320 is shown in more detail in FIG. 5. The principal components of the picture-in-picture processor are an analog-to-digital converter section 322, an input section 324, a fast switch (FSW) and bus section 326, a timing and control section 328 and a digital-to-analog converter section 330. The timing and control section 328 is shown in more detail in FIG. 11.

The picture-in-picture processor 320 may be embodied as an improved variation of a basic CPIP chip developed by Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc. The basic CPIP chip is described more fully in a publication entitled The CTC 140 Picture in Picture (CPIP) Technical Training Manual, available from Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc., Indianapolis, Ind. A number of special features or special effects are possible, the following being illustrative. The basic special effect is a large picture having a small picture overlaying a portion thereof as shown in FIG. 1(c). The large and small pictures can result from the same video signal, from different video signals and can be interchanged or swapped. Generally speaking, the audio signal is switched to always correspond to the big picture. The small picture can be moved to any position on the screen or can step through a number of predetermined positions. A zoom feature increases and decreases the size of the small picture, for example to any one of a number of preset sizes. At some point, for example the display format shown in FIG. 1(d), the large and small pictures are in fact the same size.

In a single picture mode, for example that shown in FIGS. 1(b), 1(e) or 1(f) a user can zoom in on the content of the single picture, for example, in steps from a ratio of 1.0:1 to 5.0:1. While in the zoom mode a user may search or pan through the picture content enabling the screen image to move across different areas of the picture. In either event, either the small picture or the large picture or the zoomed picture can be displayed in freeze frame (still picture format). This function enables a strobe format, wherein the last nine frames of video can be repeated on the screen. The frame repetition rate can be changed from thirty frames per second to zero frames per second.

The picture-in-picture processor used in the wide screen television according to another inventive arrangement differs from the present configuration of the basic CPIP chip itself as described above. If the basic CPIP chip were used with a television having a 16×9 screen, and without a video speed up circuit, the inset pictures would exhibit aspect ratio distortion, due to the effective 4/3 times horizontal expansion resulting from scanning across the wider 16×9 screen. Objects in the picture would be horizontally elongated. If an external speed up circuit were utilized, there would be no aspect ratio distortion, but the picture would not fill the entire screen.

Existing picture-in-picture processors based on the basic CPIP chip as used in conventional televisions are operated in a particular fashion having certain undesirable consequences. The incoming video is sampled with a 640 f_(H) clock which is locked to the horizontal synchronizing signal of the main video source. In other words, data stored in the video RAM associated with the CPIP chip is not orthogonally sampled with respect to the incoming auxiliary video source. This is a fundamental limitation on the basic CPIP method of field synchronization. The nonorthogonal nature of the input sampling rate results in skew errors of the sampled data. The limitation is a result of the video RAM used with the CPIP chip, which must use the same clock for writing and reading data. When data from the video RAM, such as video RAM 350, is displayed, the skew errors are seen as random jitter along vertical edges of the picture and are generally considered quite objectionable.

The picture-in-picture processor 320, according to an inventive arrangement and unlike the basic CPIP chip, is adapted for asymmetrically compressing the video data in one of a plurality of display modes. In this mode of operation, the pictures are compressed 4:1 in the horizontal direction and 3:1 in the vertical direction. This asymmetric mode of compression produces aspect ratio distorted pictures for storage in the video RAM. Objects in the pictures are squeezed horizontally. However, if these pictures are read out normally, as for example in the channel scan mode, for display of a 16×9 format display ratio screen, the pictures appear correct. The picture fills the screen and there is no aspect ratio distortion. The asymmetric compression mode according to this aspect of the invention makes it possible to generate the special display formats on a 16×9 screen without external speed up circuitry.

FIG. 11 is a block diagram of the timing and control section 328 of the picture-in-picture processor, for example a modified version of the CPIP chip described above, which includes a decimation circuit 328C for implementing the asymmetric compression as one of a plurality of selectable display modes. The remaining display modes can provide auxiliary pictures of different sizes. Each of horizontal and vertical decimation circuits comprises a counter which is programmed for a compression factor from a table of values under the control of the WSP μP 340. The range of values can be 1:1, 2:1, 3:1 and so on. The compression factors can be symmetric or asymmetric, depending upon how the table is set up. Control of the compression ratios can also be implemented by fully programmable, general purpose decimation circuits under the control of the WSP μP 340.

In full screen PIP modes, the picture-in-picture processor, in conjunction with a free running oscillator 348 will take Y/C input from a decoder, for example an adaptive line comb filter, decode the signal into Y, U, V color components and generate horizontal and vertical sync pulses. These signals are processed in the picture-in-picture processor for the various full screen modes such as zoom, freeze and channel scan. During the channel scan mode, for example, the horizontal and vertical sync present from the video signals input section will have many discontinuities because the signals sampled (different channels) will have non-related sync pulses and will be switched at seemingly random moments in time. Therefore the sample clock (and read/write video RAM clock) is determined by the free running oscillator. For freeze and zoom modes, the sample clock will be locked to incoming video horizontal sync, which in these special cases is the same as the display clock frequency.

Referring again to FIG. 4, Y, U, V and C₋₋ SYNC (composite sync) outputs from the picture-in-picture processor in analog form can be re-encoded into Y/C components by encode circuit 366, which operates in conjunction with a 3.58 MHz oscillator 380. This Y/C₋₋ PIP₋₋ ENC signal may be connected to a Y/C switch, not shown, which enables the re-encoded Y/C components to be substituted for the Y/C components of the main signal. From this point on, the PIP encoded Y, U, V and sync signals would be the basis for horizontal and vertical timing in the rest of the chassis. This mode of operation is appropriate for implementing a zoom mode for the PIP, based upon operation of the interpolator and FIFO's in the main signal path.

With further reference to FIG. 5, the picture-in-picture processor 320 comprises analog to digital converting section 322, input section 324, fast switch FSW and bus control section 326, timing and control section 328 and digital to analog converting section 330. In general, the picture-in-picture processor 320 digitizes the video signal into luminance (Y) and color difference signals (U, V), subsampling and storing the results in a 1 megabit video RAM 350 as explained above. The video RAM 350 associated with the picture-in-picture processor 320 has a memory capacity of 1 megabit, which is not large enough to store a full field of video data with 8-bit samples. Increased memory capacity tends to be expensive and can require more complex management circuitry. The smaller number of bits per sample in the auxiliary channel represents a reduction in quantization resolution, or bandwidth, relative to the main signal, which is processed with 8-bit samples throughout. This effective reduction of bandwidth is not usually a problem when the auxiliary displayed picture is relatively small, but can be troublesome if the auxiliary displayed picture is larger, for example the same size as the main displayed picture. Resolution processing circuit 370 can selectively implement one or more schemes for enhancing the quantization resolution or effective bandwidth of the auxiliary video data. A number of data reduction and data restoration schemes have been developed, including for example, paired pixel compression and dithering and dedithering. A dedithering circuit would be operatively disposed downstream of the video RAM 350, for example in the auxiliary signal path of the gate array, as explained in more detail below. Moreover, different dithering and dedithering sequences involving different numbers of bits and different paired pixel compressions involving different number of bits are contemplated. One of a number of particular data reduction and restoration schemes can be selected by the WSP μP in order to maximize resolution of the displayed video for each particular kind of picture display format.

The luminance and color difference signals are stored in an 1:1 six-bit Y, U ,V fashion. In other words, each component is quantized into six-bit samples. There are eight luminance samples for every pair of color difference samples. The picture-in-picture processor 320 is operated in a mode whereby incoming video data is sampled with a 640 f_(H) clock rate locked to the incoming auxiliary video synchronizing signal instead. In this mode, data stored in the video RAM is orthogonally sampled. When the data is read out of the picture-in-picture processor video RAM 350, it is read using the same 640 f_(H) clock locked to the incoming auxiliary video signal. However, even though this data was orthogonally sampled and stored, and can be read out orthogonally, it cannot be displayed orthogonally directly from the video RAM 350, due to the asynchronous nature of the main and auxiliary video sources. The main and auxiliary video sources might be expected to be synchronous only in that instance where they are displaying signals from the same video source.

Further processing is required in order to synchronize the auxiliary channel, that is the output of data from the video RAM 350, to the main channel. With reference again to FIG. 4, two four bit latches 352A and 352B are used to recombine the 8-bit data blocks from the video RAM 4-bit output port. The four bit latches also reduce the data clock rate from 1280 f_(H) to 640 f_(H).

Generally, the video display and deflection system is synchronized with the main video signal. The main video signal must be speeded up, as explained above, to fill the wide screen display. The auxiliary video signal must be vertically synchronized with the first video signal and the video display. The auxiliary video signal can be delayed by a fraction of a field period in a field memory, and then expanded in a line memory. Synchronization of the auxiliary video data with main video data is accomplished by utilizing the video RAM 350 as a field memory and a first in first out (FIFO) line memory device 354 for expanding the signal. The size of FIFO 354 is 2048×8. The size of FIFO is related to the minimum line storage capacity thought to be reasonably necessary to avoid read/write pointer collisions. Read/write pointer collisions occur when old data is read out of the FIFO before new data has an opportunity to be written into the FIFO. Read/write pointer collisions also occur when new data overwrites the memory before the old data has an opportunity to be read out of the FIFO.

The 8-bit DATA₋₋ PIP data blocks from video RAM 350 are written into 2048×8 FIFO 354 with the same picture-in-picture processor 640 f_(H) clock which was used to sample the video data, that is, the 640 f_(H) clock which is locked to the auxiliary signal, rather than the main signal. The FIFO 354 is read using the display clock of 1024 f_(H), which is locked to horizontal synchronizing component of the main video channel. The use of a multiple line memory (FIFO) which has independent read and write port clocks enables data which was orthogonally sampled at a first rate to be displayed orthogonally at a second rate. The asynchronous nature of the read and write clocks, however, does require that steps be undertaken to avoid read/write pointer collisions.

The main signal path 304, auxiliary signal path 306 and output signal path 312 of the gate array 300 are shown in block diagram form in FIG. 6. The gate array also comprises a clocks/sync circuit 320 and a WSP μP decoder 310. Data and address output lines of the WSP μP decoder 310, identified as WSP DATA, are supplied to each of the main circuits and paths identified above, as well as to the picture-in-picture processor 320 and resolution processing circuit 370. It will be appreciated that whether or not certain circuits are, or are not, defined as being part of the gate array is largely a matter of convenience for facilitating explanation of the inventive arrangements.

The gate array is responsible for expanding, compressing and cropping video data of the main video channel, as and if necessary, to implement different picture display formats. The luminance component Y₋₋ MN is stored in a first in first out (FIFO) line memory 356 for a length of time depending on the nature of the interpolation of the luminance component. The combined chrominance components U/V₋₋ MN are stored in FIFO 358. Auxiliary signal luminance and chrominance components Y₋₋ PIP, U₋₋ PIP and V₋₋ PIP are developed by demultiplexer 355. The luminance component undergoes resolution processing, as desired, in circuit 357, and is expanded as necessary by interpolator 359, generating signal Y₋₋ AUX as an output.

In some instances, the auxiliary display will be as large as the main signal display, as shown for example in FIG. 1(d). The memory limitations associated with the picture-in-picture processor and video RAM 350 can provide an insufficient number of data points, or pixels for filling such a large display area. In those circumstances, resolution processing circuit 357 can be used to restore pixels to the auxiliary video signal to replace those lost during data compression, or reduction. The resolution processing may correspond to the resolution processing undertaken by circuit 370 shown in FIG. 4. As an example, circuit 370 may be a dithering circuit and circuit 357 may be a dedithering circuit.

Interpolation of the auxiliary signal can take place in the auxiliary signal path 306. The PIP circuit 301 manipulates a 6 bit Y, U, V, 8:1:1 field memory, video RAM 350, to store incoming video data. The video RAM 350 holds two fields of video data in a plurality of memory locations. Each memory location holds eight bits of data. In each 8-bit location there is one 6-bit Y (luminance) sample (sampled at 640 f_(H)) and 2 other bits. These two other bits hold either fast switch data (FSW₋₋ DAT) or part of a U or V sample (sampled at 80 f_(H)). The FSW₋₋ DAT values indicate which type of field was written into video RAM, as follows:

FSW₋₋ DAT=0: No Picture;

FSW₋₋ DAT=1: Upper (Odd) Field; and,

FSW₋₋ DAT=2: Lower (Even) Field.

The fields occupy spatial positions within the video RAM having boundaries defined by horizontal and vertical addresses, as suggested by the memory position diagram in FIG. 15. The boundary is defined at those addresses by a change in the fast switch data from no picture to valid field, and vice versa. These transitions in fast switch data define the perimeter of the PIP insert, which is also referred to as the PIP box or PIP overlay. It will be appreciated that the image aspect ratio of objects in the PIP picture can be controlled independently of the format display ratio of the PIP box or overlay, for example, 4×3 or 16×9. The position of the PIP overlay on the screen will be determined by the starting address of the read pointer of the video RAM at the start of the scanning for each field of the main signal. Since there are two fields of data stored in the video RAM 350, and the entire video RAM 350 is read during the display period, both fields are read during the display scan. The PIP circuit 301 will determine which field will be read out of the memory to be displayed through the use of the fast switch data and the start position of the read pointer. It might seem logical that if the display, which is locked to the main video source, were displaying the upper field of the main picture then the portion of the video RAM corresponding to the upper field of the auxiliary picture would be read out of the video RAM, converted to analog data, and displayed.

This would work well for about half of all possible phase relations between the main and auxiliary video sources. A problem arises because reading the video RAM is always faster than writing the video RAM for compressed pictures in the PIP mode. The read memory pointer may overtake the write pointer if the same field type were being written and read at the same time. This would result in a 50% chance of a motion tear somewhere in the small picture. Accordingly, the PIP circuit always reads the opposite field type that is being written to overcome the motion tear problem. If the field type being read is the opposite type than that being displayed, then the even field stored in the video RAM is inverted by deleting the top line of the field when the field is read out of memory. The result is that the small picture maintains correct interlace without a motion tear. The end result of this field synchronization is that CPIP chip provides a signal which is called PIP₋₋ FSW. This is the overlay signal which the PIP circuit provides to an analog switch, which switches between main and auxiliary channel Y/C (luminance and modulated chrominance video information) signals.

With reference to FIGS. 4 and 10, the auxiliary video input data is sampled at a 640 f_(H) rate and stored in video RAM 350. The auxiliary data is read out of video RAM 350 is designated VRAM₋₋ OUT. The PIP circuit 301 also has the capability of reducing the auxiliary picture by equal integer factors horizontally and vertically, as well as asymmetrically. The auxiliary channel data is buffered and synchronized to the main channel digital video by the 4 bit latches 352A and 352B, the auxiliary FIFO 354, timing circuit 369 and synchronization circuit 371. The VRAM₋₋ OUT data is sorted into Y (luminance), U, V (color components), and FSW₋₋ DAT (fast switch data) by demultiplexer 355. The FSW₋₋ DAT indicates which field type was written into the video RAM. The PIP₋₋ FSW signal is received directly from the PIP circuit and applied to the output control circuit. Here the decision is made as to which field read out of video RAM is to be displayed. Finally, the auxiliary channel video component data is selected for output to the display through three output multiplexers 315, 317 and 319, shown in FIG. 6. Instead of overlaying the PIP small picture using an analog switch at a composite or Y/C interface, the WSP μp 340 performs the PIP overlay digitally.

The auxiliary channel is sampled at 640 f_(H) rate while the main channel is sampled at a 1024 f_(H) rate. The auxiliary channel FIFO 354 (2048×8) converts the data from the auxiliary channel sample rate to the main channel clock rate. In this process, the video signal undergoes an 8/5 (1024/640) compression. This is more than the 4/3 compression necessary to correctly display the auxiliary channel signal. Therefore, the auxiliary channel must be expanded by the interpolator to correctly display a 4×3 small picture. The amount of interpolator expansion required is 5/6. The expansion factor X is determined as follows:

    X=(640/1024)·(4/3)=5/6

Therefore, regardless of how the small picture is reduced by the PIP processor, the small picture may be correctly displayed in 4×3 format on the display by setting the interpolator 359 to perform a 5/6 expansion (5 samples in, 6 samples out).

The PIP₋₋ FSW data does not provide a good enough method for interpreting which field of the CPIP VRAM should be displayed because the PIP video data is horizontally raster mapped to maintain a correct PIP aspect ratio. Although the PIP small picture would maintain correct interlace, the PIP overlay region would generally be the wrong horizontal size. The only case in which the PIP overlay size would be correct would be for a 5/8 expansion using the interpolator 359 which would result in a 16×9 small picture. For all other interpolator settings, the overlay box would remain 16×9 while the inset picture would vary horizontally. The PIP₋₋ FSW signal lacks information regarding the correct horizontal size of the PIP overlay. The video RAM data is read prior to the PIP circuit completing the synchronization algorithm. Thus, the fast switch data FSW₋₋ DAT which is embedded in the video RAM data stream VRAM₋₋ OUT corresponds to the field type written into the video RAM. The video RAM video component data (Y, U, V) has been corrected for motion tear and correct interlace, but the FSW₋₋ DAT has not been modified.

In accordance with an inventive arrangement, the PIP overlay box is the correct size because the FSW₋₋ DAT information is expanded and interpolated together with the video component data (Y, U, V). The FSW₋₋ DAT contains the correct sizing of the overlay region, however, it does not indicate which field is the correct field to display. The PIP₋₋ FSW and FSW₋₋ DAT can be used together to solve the problem of maintaining interlace integrity and the correct overlay size. In normal operation, as the CPIP chip might be used in 4×3 television receivers, the field placement in the video RAM is arbitrary. The fields may be aligned vertically, horizontally, or not aligned at all. In order to make the wide screen processor and the CPIP chip work compatibly, it is necessary that the PIP field locations not be stored on the same vertical lines. In other words, the PIP fields may not be programmed so that the same vertical addresses are used for both the upper and lower field types. It is convenient from a programming perspective to store the PIP fields in the video RAM 350 in a vertically aligned manner, as shown in FIG. 15.

A signal PIP₋₋ OVL forces the output control circuit 321 to display auxiliary data when this signal is active, that is, logically HI. A block diagram of a circuit for generating the PIP₋₋ OVL signal is shown in FIG. 16. Circuit 680 comprises a J-K flip/flop 682, the Q output of which is one input to multiplexer 688. The output of multiplexer 688 is an input to a D-type flip/flop 684, the Q output of which is the other input to multiplexer 688 and one input to AND gate 690. The PIP₋₋ FSW and SOL (start of line) signals are the J and K inputs respectively to flip/flop 682. An exclusive OR gate 686 has the two fast switch data bits FSW₋₋ DAT0 and FSW₋₋ DAT1 signals as inputs. Values of (1, 0) and (0, 1), which are logically exclusive inputs, indicate a valid field, even and odd respectively. Values of (0, 0) and (1, 1), which are not logically exclusive, indicate no valid video data. A transition from either of (0, 1) or (1, 0) to either of (0, 0) or (1, 1), or vice versa, indicates a boundary transition defining the PIP box or overlay The output of exclusive OR gate 686 is a second input to AND gate 690. The third input of AND gate 690 is the RD₋₋ EN₋₋ AX signal, the read enable signal for the auxiliary FIFO 354. The output of AND gate 690 is the PIP₋₋ OVL signal. Circuit 680 introduces a one line (field line) delay from the time PIP₋₋ FSW goes active to the actual enabling of the overlay region. This is accounted for in the video data path as the FIFO 354 also introduces a one field line delay in the PIP video data being displayed. Therefore, the PIP overlay is overlaid perfectly with the video data, although it will be one field line later than programmed through PIP circuit. The RD₋₋ EN₋₋ AX signal allows the PIP to be overlaid only when valid auxiliary FIFO data has been read out of the FIFO 354. This is necessary because FIFO data may be held after reading has ended. This may cause the PIP overlay logic to determine that the PIP overlay is active outside of valid PIP data. Enabling the PIP overlay with RD₋₋ EN₋₋ AX assures that PIP data is valid. In accordance with the inventive arrangements, the overlay or box for the small picture auxiliary video is correctly placed and sized regardless of how the auxiliary video has been expanded, compressed or interpolated. This works for small picture video sources which are from 4×3 formats, 16×9 formats and many other formats as well.

The chrominance components U₋₋ PIP and V₋₋ PIP are delayed by circuit 367 for a length of time depending on the nature of the interpolation of the luminance component, generating signals U₋₋ AUX and V₋₋ AUX as outputs. The respective Y, U and V components of the main and auxiliary signals are combined in respective multiplexers 315, 317 and 319 in the output signal path 312, by controlling the read enable signals of the FIFO's 354, 356 and 358. The multiplexers 315, 317 and 319 are responsive to output multiplexer control circuit 321. Output multiplexer control circuit 321 is responsive to the clock signal CLK, the start of line signal SOL, the H₋₋ COUNT signal, the vertical blanking reset signal and the output of the fast switch from the picture-in-picture processor and WSP μP 340. The multiplexed luminance and chrominance components Y₋₋ MX, U₋₋ MX and V₋₋ MX are supplied to respective digital/analog converters 360, 362 and 364 respectively. The digital to analog converters are followed by low pass filters 361,363 and 365 respectively, shown in FIG. 4. The various functions of the picture-in-picture processor, the gate array and the data reduction circuit are controlled by WSP μP 340. The WSP μP 340 is responsive to the TV μP 216, being connected thereto by a serial bus. The serial bus may be a four wire bus as shown, having lines for data, clock signals, enable signals and reset signals. The WSP μ P 340 communicates with the different circuits of the gate array through a WSP μP decoder 310.

In one case, it is necessary to compress the 4×3 NTSC video by a factor of 4/3 to avoid aspect ratio distortion of the displayed picture. In the other case, the video can be expanded to perform horizontal zooming operations usually accompanied by vertical zooming. Horizontal zoom operations up to 33% can be accomplished by reducing compressions to less than 4/3. A sample interpolator is used to recalculate the incoming video to a new pixel positions because the luminance video bandwidth, up to 5.5 MHz for S-VHS format, occupies a large percentage of the Nyquist fold over frequency, which is 8 MHz for a 1024 f_(H) clock.

As shown in FIG. 6, the luminance data Y₋₋ MN is routed through an interpolator 337 in the main signal path 304 which recalculates sample values based on the compression or the expansion of the video. The function of the switches or route selectors 323 and 331 is to reverse the topology of the main signal path 304 with respect to the relative positions of the FIFO 356 and the interpolator 337. In particular, these switches select whether the interpolator 337 precedes the FIFO 356, as required for compression, or whether the FIFO 356 precedes the interpolator 337, as required for expansion. The switches 323 and 331 are responsive to a route control circuit 335, which is itself responsive to the WSP μP 340. It will be remembered that during small picture modes the auxiliary video signal is compressed for storage in the video RAM 350, and only expansion is necessary for practical purposes. Accordingly, no comparable switching is required in the auxiliary signal path.

The main signal path is shown in more detail in FIG. 9. The switch 323 is implemented by two multiplexers 325 and 327. Switch 331 is implemented by multiplexer 333. The three multiplexers are responsive to the route control circuit 335, which is itself responsive to the WSP μP 340. A horizontal timing/synchronization circuit 339 generates timing signals controlling the writing and reading of the FIFOs, as well as latches 347 and 351, and multiplexer 353. The clock signal CLK and start of line signal SOL are generated by the clocks/sync circuit 319. An analog to digital conversion control circuit 369 is responsive to Y₋₋ MN, the WSP μP 340 and the most significant bit of UV₋₋ MN.

An interpolator control circuit 349 generates intermediate pixel position values (K), interpolator compensation filter weighting (C) and clock gating information CGY for the luminance and CGUV for the color components. It is the clock gating information which pauses (decimates) or repeats the FIFO data to allow samples not to be written on some clocks for effecting compression or some samples to be read multiple times for expansion.

It is possible to perform video compressions and expansions through the use of a FIFO. For example, a WR₋₋ EN₋₋ MN₋₋ Y signal enables data to be written into the FIFO 356. Every fourth sample can be inhibited from being written into the FIFO. This constitutes a 4/3 compression. It is the function of the interpolator 337 to recalculate the luminance samples being written into the FIFO so that the data read out of the FIFO is smooth, rather than jagged. Expansions may be performed in exactly the opposite manner as compressions. In the case of compressions the write enable signal has clock gating information attached to it in the form of inhibit pulses. For expanding data, the clock gating information is applied to the read enable signal. This will pause the data as it is being read from the FIFO 356. In this case it is the function of the interpolator 337, which follows the FIFO 356 during this process, to recalculate the sampled data from jagged to smooth. In the expansion case the data must pause while being read from the FIFO 356 and while being clocked into the interpolator 337. This is different from the compression case where the data is continuously clocked through the interpolator 337. For both cases, compression and expansion, the clock gating operations can easily be performed in a synchronous manner, that is, events can occur based on the rising edges of the system clock 1024 f_(H).

There are a number of advantages in this topology for luminance interpolation. The clock gating operations, namely data decimation and data repetition, may be performed in a synchronous manner. If a switchable video data topology were not used to interchange the positions of the interpolator and FIFO, the read or write clocks would need to be double clocked to pause or repeat the data. The term double clocked means that two data points must be written into the FIFO in a single clock cycle or read from the FIFO during a single clock cycle. The resulting circuitry cannot be made to operate synchronously with the system clock, since the writing or reading clock frequency must be twice as high as the system clock frequency. Moreover, the switchable topology requires only one interpolator and one FIFO to perform both compressions and expansions. If the video switching arrangement described herein were not used, the double clocking situation can be avoided only by using two FIFO's to accomplish the functionality of both compression and expansion. One FIFO for expansions would need to be placed in front of the interpolator and one FIFO for compressions would need to be placed after the interpolator.

The wide screen processor also has the capability to control the vertical deflection to perform a vertical zoom function. The topology of the wide screen processor is such that both auxiliary and main channel horizontal raster mapping (interpolation) functions are independent of each other and independent of vertical zoom (which manipulates the vertical deflection). Because of this topology, the main channel may be expanded both horizontally and vertically to maintain a correct aspect ratio main channel zoom. However, unless the auxiliary channel interpolator settings are changed, the PIP (small picture) will zoom vertically but not horizontally. Therefore, the auxiliary channel interpolator can be made to perform larger expansions to maintain a correct image aspect ratio of the PIP small picture as the vertical is expanded.

A good example of this process occurs when the main channel is displaying 16×9 letterbox material. The main horizontal raster mapping is set to 1:1 (no expansion, no compression). The vertical is zoomed 33% (that is, expanded by 4/3) to eliminate the black bars associated with letterbox source material. The main channel image aspect ratio is now correct. The auxiliary channel nominal setting, for 4×3 source material with no vertical zoom, is 5/6. A different value for the expansion factor X is determined as follows:

    X=(5/6)·(3/4)=5/8

When the auxiliary channel interpolator 359 is set for 5/6, the correct small picture image aspect ratio is maintained and the objects inside the PIP appear without aspect ratio distortion.

The interpolators for the luminance components of the main and auxiliary signals may be skew correction filters. A four point interpolator as described therein, for example, comprises a two point linear interpolator and an associated filter and multiplier connected in cascade to provide amplitude and phase compensation. In total, four adjacent data samples are used to calculate each interpolated point. The input signal is applied to the two-point linear interpolator. The delay imparted to the input is proportional to the value of a delay control signal (K). The amplitude and phase errors of the delayed signal are minimized by the application of a correction signal obtained by an additional filter and multiplier connected in cascade. This correction signal provides peaking which equalizes the frequency response of the two point linear interpolation filter for all values of (K). The original four point interpolator is optimized for use with signals having a pass band of fs/₄, where fs is the data sample rate.

Alternatively, and in accordance with inventive arrangements described in copending applications, both channels can use what is termed a two stage interpolative process. The frequency response of the original variable interpolation filter can be improved by using such a two stage process, referred to as a two stage interpolator. A two stage interpolator can comprise a 2n+4 tap finite impulse response (FIR) filter with fixed coefficients and a four point variable interpolator. The FIR filter output is spatially located midway between the input pixel samples. The output of the FIR filter is then combined by interleaving with the original data samples, which are delayed, to create an effective 2 fs sample rate. This is a valid assumption for frequencies in the pass band of the FIR filter. The result is that the effective pass band of the original four point interpolator is significantly increased.

The clocks/sync circuit 320 generates read, write and enable signals needed for operating FIFOs 354, 356 and 358. The FIFOs for the main and auxiliary channels are enabled for writing data into storage for those portions of each video line which is required for subsequent display. Data is written from one of the main or auxiliary channels, but not both, as necessary to combine data from each source on the same video line or lines of the display. The FIFO 354 of the auxiliary channel is written synchronously with the auxiliary video signal, but is read out of memory synchronously with the main video signal. The main video signal components are read into the FIFOs 356 and 358 synchronously with the main video signal, and are read out of memory synchronously with the main video. How often the read function is switched back and forth between the main and auxiliary channels is a function of the particular special effect chosen.

Generation of different special effects such as cropped side-by-side pictures are accomplished through manipulating the read and write enable control signals for the line memory FIFOs. The process for this display format is illustrated in FIGS. 7 and 8. In the case of cropped side-by-side displayed pictures, the write enable control signal (WR₋₋ EN₋₋ AX) for 2048×8 FIFO 354 of the auxiliary channel is active for (1/2)·(4/3)=0.67 or approximately 67% of the auxiliary channel active line period (pre speed up), as shown in FIG. 7. This corresponds to approximately 33% cropping (approximately 67% active picture) and a compression ratio of 4/3 being performed on the auxiliary channel. In the main video channel, shown in the upper part of FIG. 8, the write enable control signal (WR₋₋ EN₋₋ MN₋₋ Y) for the 910×8 FIFOs 356 and 358 is active for (1/2)·(4/3)=0.67 or 67% of the main channel active line period. This corresponds to approximately 33% cropping and a compression ratio of 4/3 being performed on the main channel video by the 910×8 FIFOs.

In each of the FIFOs, the video data is buffered to be read out at a particular point in time. The active region of time where the data may be read out from each FIFO is determined by the display format chosen. In the example of the side-by-side cropped mode shown, the main channel video is being displayed on the left hand half of the display and the auxiliary channel video is displayed on the right hand half of the display. The arbitrary video portions of the waveforms are different for the main and auxiliary channels as illustrated. The read enable control signal (RD₋₋ EN₋₋ MN) of the main channel 910×8 FIFOs is active for 50% of the display active line period of the display beginning with the start of active video, immediately following the video back porch. The auxiliary channel read enable control signal (RD₋₋ EN₋₋ AX) is active for the other 50% of the display active line period beginning with the falling edge of the RD₋₋ EN₋₋ MN signal and ending with the beginning of the main channel video front porch. It may be noted that write enable control signals are synchronous with their respective FIFO input data (main or auxiliary) while the read enable control signals are synchronous with the main channel video.

The display format shown in FIG. 1(d) is particularly desirable as it enables two nearly full field pictures to displayed in a side by side format. The display is particularly effective and appropriate for a wide format display ratio display, for example 16×9. Most NTSC signals are represented in a 4×3 format, which of course corresponds to 12×9. Two 4×3 format display ratio NTSC pictures may be presented on the same 16×9 format display ratio display, either by cropping the pictures by 33% or squeezing the pictures by 33%, and introducing aspect ratio distortion. Depending on user preference, the ratio of picture cropping to aspect ratio distortion may be set any where in between the limits of 0% and 33%. As an example, two side by side pictures may be presented as 16.7% squeezed and 16.7% cropped.

The horizontal display time for a 16×9 format display ratio display is the same as a 4×3 format display ratio display, because both have 63.5 microsecond nominal line length. Accordingly, an NTSC video signal must be sped up by a factor of 4/3 to preserve a correct aspect ratio, without distortion. The 4/3 factor is calculated as ratio of the two display formats:

    4/3=(16/9)/(4/3)

Variable interpolators are utilized in accordance with aspects of this invention to speed up and slow down the video signals. In the past, FIFOs having different clock rates at the inputs and outputs have been used to perform a similar function. By way of comparison, if two NTSC 4×3 format display ratio signals are displayed on a single 4×3 format display ratio display, each picture must be distorted or cropped, or some combination thereof, by 50%. A speed up comparable to that needed for a wide screen application is unnecessary.

An inventive arrangement taught herein enables a viewer to position the PIP via remote control. The following method and apparatus achieve smooth horizontal movement of the PIP across the entire range of the 16×9 display.

As explained in detail above, the PIP feature can be implemented with the combination of the variation of the CPIP chip (and associated VRAM) and the wide screen processor (including the FIFO's). In this system CPIP performs most of the PIP functions (data sampling, decimation and VRAM control) required for display of the PIP on a 4×3 display. The wide screen processor corrects for the aspect ratio distortion which would otherwise occur due to the wide format display ratio of the wide screen television and actually performs the overlay.

In addition to the previously mentioned functions, it is desirable for the wide screen processor (or WSP) to perform the horizontal panning of the PIP because it is not possible to implement this function in CPIP with the required panning resolution. A block diagram of the auxiliary data path in the WSP is shown in FIG. 10.

The important aspects of operation in the auxiliary data path in connection with horizontal panning of the PIP are as follows. The auxiliary data is sampled by CPIP at a 640 f_(H) rate. The CPIP data is read out of the VRAM at the node labelled VRAM OUT in the block diagram. CPIP processes the data before writing it to the VRAM by filtering and decimating the PIP to the correct size horizontally and vertically (assuming a 4×3 display). The INTERP₋₋ AX block 359 will perform the required horizontal interpolation. CPIP generates the signal called ₋₋ CGR which, when active, enables reading of the VRAM. The WSP uses the falling edge of this signal to initialize a counter which controls writing of the auxiliary FIFO. As the VRAM is read, the data is then stored again in the auxiliary FIFO where it will be synchronized to the display. The auxiliary channel data is buffered and synchronized to the display by the four bit latches 352A and 352B, the auxiliary FIFO (2048×8) 354, the TIMING block 369 and the SYNCHRONIZATION block 368. The PIP₋₋ FSW signal is received from CPIP and applied to the OUTPUT MUX CONTROL block 321, in FIG. 6. The CPIP₋₋ FSW signal is used in conjunction with encoded control bits from the VRAM (FSW₋₋ DAT(I:O)) to determine when to select the aux video for display. The auxiliary channel video component is selected for display through the three output multiplexers 315, 317 and 319 for the Y, U, and V signals.

The actual memory locations in the VRAM where the PIP is stored are determined through CPIP software. While the panning algorithm is not dependent on the memory locations used, it will be assumed that the data is stored in the VRAM as shown in FIG. 17 in order to simplify the discussion. Because writing the VRAM is initiated by the auxiliary video vertical sync signal, but reading the VRAM is initiated by the display (or main vertical synchronizing signal), two fields of auxiliary video are stored in the VRAM to avoid a motion tear in the auxiliary video. By storing both fields of aux video, it is possible to always read the field that is not being written. Interlace is maintained by a synchronization algorithm in CPIP.

If the data is stored in the VRAM as shown in FIG. 17, CPIP programming is somewhat simplified. It also then follows that the VRAM memory locations containing the PIP information will be the first horizontal addresses read following the falling edge of ₋₋ CGR. The auxiliary FIFO should then be enabled for writing immediately following the falling edge of ₋₋ CGR so that all PIP information will be written to the auxiliary FIFO.

The results of these assumptions may then be shown in FIG. 18. The data signifying the PIP is shown stored at the "top" of the FIFO (meaning the lowest addresses). Even though this would only be strictly true for the first line of video following a write pointer reset (because the FIFO length is not necessarily a multiple of the number of samples written into the FIFO each line), however, the figure is still useful for understanding the principle.

The reading of the auxiliary FIFO is synchronous with the display and may or may not be related to the writing of the auxiliary FIFO. The reading is controlled by a counter which is initialized at the beginning of the display line period (start of line or SOL). SOL is nominally aligned with the beginning of horizontal sync. Because it is assumed that the PIP is stored at the "top" of the FIFO, if reading of the auxiliary FIFO is delayed from SOL by approximately 9.4 μsec (distance from sync to blanking end), the PIP will appear at the left edge of the display. In order to pan the PIP to the right, all that is required is to delay the start of read of the auxiliary FIFO by the additional desired pan amount. In order to obtain a panning range across the entire display, it is necessary to limit the number of points written into the aux FIFO to only the number of points actually contained in the PIP. That is, for example, if the PIP is 200 samples wide, only approximately 200 samples should be written into the auxiliary FIFO. This is because the number of points written into the FIFO each line must equal the number of points read from the FIFO each line. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A horizontal panning system, comprising:means for receiving first and second video signals representative of first and second pictures respectively; video display means having a wide format display ratio and synchronized with said first video signal; means for generating successive lines of video information representative of said first picture, substantially free of image aspect ratio distortion; means for processing said second video signal to define an auxiliary picture smaller in size than said video display means and said first picture, and substantially free of image aspect ratio distortion; means for storing successive lines of video information representative of said auxiliary picture; means for combining said video information representative of said first and auxiliary pictures; means for generating a variable time delay from a synchronizing component of said first video signal; and, means for successively initiating a transfer of said lines of video information representative of said auxiliary picture from said storing means to said combining means after said variable time delay, said variable time delay determining one of a plurality of horizontal panning positions of said auxiliary picture across all of said video display means.
 2. The system of claim 1, wherein said storing means comprises a first in first out line memory.
 3. The system of claim 1, wherein each line of said auxiliary picture as shown on said video display means has a certain number of video samples and each of said lines of video information in said storing means has a number of video samples approximately equal to said certain number.
 4. The system of claim 1, wherein said video information representative of said auxiliary picture comprises a plurality of digital samples and the number of said samples written into said storing means for each of said lines is approximately equal to the number of said samples read from said storing means for transfer to said combining means.
 5. The system of claim 1, further comprising manually operable control means for adjusting said variable time delay.
 6. The system of claim 1, wherein said auxiliary picture is vertically synchronized with said video display means, at least in part, by said means for processing said second video signal to define said auxiliary picture.
 7. The system of claim 1, wherein said video information representative of said auxiliary picture is vertically synchronized with said video display means by combined operation of said means for processing said second video signal to define said auxiliary picture and said means for storing said successive lines of video information representative of said auxiliary picture.
 8. The system of claim 1, wherein said means for generating said variable time delay comprises a counter initialized at a time corresponding to the start of each horizontal line of said first video signal.
 9. A horizontal panning system, comprising:means for receiving first and second video signals representative of first and second pictures respectively; video display means having a wide format display ratio and synchronized with said first video signal; means for generating successive lines of video information representative of said first picture; a picture-in-picture processor responsive to said second video signal for defining an auxiliary picture smaller in size than said video display means, said picture-in-picture processor having a video RAM and addressing means for writing video data into said video RAM and reading video data out of said video RAM, said picture-in-picture processor defining an operating display range horizontally smaller than said video display means; a first-in-first-out multiple line memory for storing successive lines of video information representative of said auxiliary picture; means for successively reading said lines of video information representative of said auxiliary picture from said line memory, said reading of said line memory controlling horizontal panning of said auxiliary picture across all of said video display means; and, means for combining said video information read from said line memory with said video information representative of said first picture.
 10. The system of claim 9, comprising a counter for controlling initiation of said reading from said line memory.
 11. The system of claim 9, comprising:a counter for controlling initiation of said reading from said line memory; means for generating a variable time delay; and, means for initializing said counter at a time corresponding to the start of each horizontal line of said first video signal.
 12. The system of claim 11, further comprising manually operable control means for adjusting said variable time delay.
 13. The system of claim 9, wherein each line of said auxiliary picture as shown on said video display means has a certain number of video samples and each of said lines of video information as stored in said line memory has a number of video samples approximately equal to said certain number.
 14. The system of claim 9, wherein said video information representative of said auxiliary picture comprises a plurality of digital samples and the number of said samples written into said line memory for each of said lines is approximately equal to the number of said samples read from said line memory for transfer to said combining means. 